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Question about glazing

In com­ments, Julius writes:

David: In the beau­ti­ful work you show on your gallery, are most of the effects achieved with your “thick glaz­ing” tech­nique? I have been exper­i­ment­ing with thin glazes and have run into prob­lems at every turn. For exam­ple: How to achieve an intense red or orange, since cad­mium col­ors are out? How to glaze thinly and be able to do fab­rics and table­cloths — espe­cially in light col­ors? How to do a light color ceramic bowl (as in one of yours)? Maybe you could speak in detail about the work in your gallery…

Thanks for the kind words, Julius. Glaz­ing is not my pri­mary oil paint­ing tech­nique.* I tend to paint fairly opaquely most of the time, attempt­ing to achieve the final look of each pas­sage before mov­ing to the next. I’m not dog­matic about that, how­ever, and will go back over a pas­sage, opaquely or trans­par­ently, if I didn’t get it right the first time.

I do use glaz­ing for spe­cific pur­poses. For exam­ple, the back­ground of the self por­trait in the gallery is yel­low ochre glazed over white. Although YO is usu­ally thought of as rather dull, its under­tone has a very dif­fer­ent character—much higher in chroma and value. That’s one great use of glaz­ing: to avoid “chalk­i­ness” (low­ered chroma) at high values.

As far as intense red or orange, here’s how that was done his­tor­i­cally. Start by paint­ing that spe­cific pas­sage in a flat opaque color sim­i­lar to your desired final hue. For exam­ple, you could use cad­mium red light (his­tor­i­cally, this would have been ver­mil­ion, which behaves sim­i­larly to cad red). Let it dry. Then glaze over it with a sim­i­lar trans­par­ent color such as alizarin crim­son (which is fugi­tive) or pyrol ruby (which is not). Make this sec­ond color thick where you want it dark and thin where you want mid­tones or lights. If desired, paint into the lights with the same or sim­i­lar col­ors mixed with white. Let it dry. If the darks are not dark enough, apply another layer of glaze to those areas, per­haps dark­ened with another trans­par­ent color such as ultra­ma­rine blue. Over two or three lay­ers, you can get the darks as strong as you like, in a higher chroma than you can get with­out glaz­ing. I’ve tried this, and it works. For orange, you are lim­ited in glaz­ing col­ors, but hansa yel­low mixed with any of the mod­ern trans­par­ent organic reds or crim­sons can work.

Does this method allow you to get any color you wish? No, it does not. You are lim­ited to avail­able shades of trans­par­ent pig­ments. But the Old Mas­ters were even more lim­ited, and they didn’t make junk.

As for fab­rics, this method works quite well if you have the patience for it. Be pre­pared to go back into the lights, while the glaze layer is still wet, with opaque col­ors mixed with white.

Ceram­ics are easy. For a white ceramic glazed with blue, just paint the object with­out the blue and allow to dry. Ultra­ma­rine or other semi-transparent blues glazed on top are quite con­vinc­ing (that’s how I did the ceramic cup in the “Three Cher­ries” paint­ing in my gallery).

This would be eas­ier to show than to tell, but I hope this is helpful.


*In part that’s due to the influ­ence of my teacher, Den­nis Cheaney. Den­nis is a stu­dent of Ted Set Jacobs, who long ago rejected glaz­ing in his own paint­ing method, because he believes it makes it more dif­fi­cult to pre­cisely con­trol hue, value, and chroma. I don’t paint the same way that Den­nis and Ted do (nor nearly as well), but the vast major­ity of my for­mal instruc­tion has been in a direct paint­ing style.

Posted in art technique, color, oil painting.

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